When India gained independence, the
country was lost in a world preoccupied with the destruction brought
about by the Second World War. All of a sudden, we were responsible for
everything we did. Piggy-backing on another country's mistakes would no
longer work. The Indian National Congress in those days could
effectively speak for the people of India, but it was not an elected
body. There was not even a constitution to guide us.
The Indian Constituent Assembly met on December 9, 1946. The Assembly
appointed a number of committees to report on the various aspects of the
proposed constitution. The Indian Constitution was finalised with 395
Articles and eight Schedules, and was adopted by the Constituent
Assembly on November 26, 1949. The Indian Republic officially came into
being on January 26, 1950.
January 26 was not some random date picked out of the calendar. It was
on this date in 1927, that the Indian National Congress, then fighting
its non-violent war for freedom, voted for complete independence as
against 'dominion status'. It was the date when members of the INC took
the pledge to work towards a 'sovereign democratic republic' of India.
After the Constitution was written and adopted on November 1949,
January 26 the following year was chosen as the day when India would
finally arrive as a nation, complete with the lengthiest and the most
detailed constitution in the world. With this, Republic Day became the
most important day in the history of India. Indeed, India had become a
geographical entity on August 15, 1947, but it was on January 26, 1950
that it became a nation in the true sense, with a constitution and
elected representatives of the people.
